Deuce Bigalow Ruth Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about Deuce Bigalow Ruth with everyone.
Top Deuce Bigalow Ruth Quotes

I always think the really unfortunate thing about the Australian film industry is its lack of momentum. And I don't mean this in a derogatory way. I'm always wanting it to pick up momentum, and I'm wondering if that's even possible. — Guy Pearce

I try to play serious scenes a little funny and the comedy a little serious. — Uzo Aduba

You've done the bourgeois thing, perhaps, but let's not call that love. — Marianne Williamson

Syn? You're crushing me." Pouting, he looked down at her. "I don't want to move." A smile spread across her face. "And I kind of like you where you are. But you weigh about a ton and a half and this floor is really hard." He snorted. "Excuse me, I take great exception to that. I only weigh a ton."
-Shahara & Syn — Sherrilyn Kenyon

Lunch was quickly eaten because everyone was so curious about the Indian in the woods. — Gertrude Chandler Warner

The only reason I went to college was to play basketball. I injured my knee and couldn't play. — Jeffrey Dean Morgan

If there did not exist some one who loved, the sun would become extinct. — Victor Hugo

Come forward as servants of Islam, organize the people economically, socially, educationally and politically and I am sure that you will be a power that will be accepted by everybody. — Muhammad Ali Jinnah

Obviously, our children, who have been playing with their computers since the age of five or six, don't have quite the same brain as those who were brought up on wooden or metal toys, whose brains are certainly atrophied by comparison. — Claude Vorilhon

The spectacle of people following current custom for lack of will or imagination to do anything else is hardly a new failing. — William H. Whyte

Trust your happiness and the richness of your life at this moment. It is as true and as much yours as anything else that ever happened to you. — Katherine Anne Porter

In the schoolhouse, Mentor, the schoolteacher, gently tutored a mischievous eight-year-old named Gabe, who had neglected his studies to play and now needed help. — Lois Lowry